The technology industry is continuing to lay off thousands of employees, and is approaching 150,000 employees lost in the first three months of 2023.
The e-commerce and streaming giant Amazon announced layoffs of 9,000 employees on Monday. Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, announced 10,000 job cuts a week earlier, on March 14.
At the current pace, tech industry job losses in 2023 are set to soon surpass the 160,997 jobs the industry lost in 2022. If the trends continue, tech industry job losses in 2023 could surpass the losses in 2022 by around 300 percent.
It remains to be seen if the trend of job losses will continue or if the situation will stabilize.
As he announced the staff cuts at Dell last month, Co-Chief Operating Officer Jeff Clarke said “market conditions continue to erode with an uncertain future” and the steps the company had taken to that point to stay ahead of the downturn were “no longer enough.”
Silicon Valley Bank Collapse
The recent collapse of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) could be a byproduct of the overall challenges the tech industry is facing or a warning sign for more layoffs ahead.SVB had heavily catered to the tech industry, which has grown out of Santa Clara Valley in California, eponymously named the “Silicon Valley” for its heavy concentration of people and companies working with silicon-based computer chips. As The Guardian reported, SVB had served as the bank of choice for nearly half of all venture-based tech startups.
Banks only keep a fraction of the total value of their deposits on hand to accommodate periodic small withdrawals by depositors while they invest the rest of those deposits in the hopes of turning a larger profit. SVB had held a large portion of its depositors’ money in various investments that it could not easily sell off if the need arose for them to return a large portion of the money to its depositors. Raised interest rates have made it harder for start-ups to borrow more money, leading them to draw more heavily from their own bank accounts to make ends meet financially. SVB began selling off some of its own investments at a loss in order to have enough money on hand to pay back its depositors, and as news grew that the bank was struggling to keep up, it created a run on the bank where depositors sought to pull their money out before the bank collapsed, exacerbating SVB’s struggle to pay out depositors’ money withdrawals.